http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/35200 


Egypt Watch: Military To Fight Rising Threat of Radical Islamists


 - Trevor Westra  Tuesday, April 5, 2011 

 <http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/35200> Egypt's ruling
military leaders are feeling the same pressures that faced former president
Hosni Mubarek during his decades-long battle with Islamic radicalism. Only
days after more extremist groups declared plans to establish political
parties for the country's coming presidential elections, the Supreme Council
of the Armed Forces (SCAF) has announced that the country "will not fall
into the hands of Islamists". 

Currently, thousands of followers of the previously outlawed Gama'a
al-Islamiyya and Islamic Jihad terrorist groups - both brutally suppressed
under the Mubarek regime - are attempting to return to Egypt and support the
rising tide of Islamist movements positioning themselves for a role in
Egypt's political future. As a result, Egypt's Interior Ministry now faces
the difficult challenge of preventing these groups from creating potentially
armed and violent political blocs while at the same time supporting the
Supreme Council's commitment to free
<http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/35200> elections representing
all components of Egyptian society.  

A major obstacle standing between Islamists and reformers in Egypt is the
country's second constitutional article that defines Islam as the official
state religion. Secularists had hoped to topple the
<http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/35200> constitution in last
month's referendum but were defeated after Islamists - led by the
significantly established Muslim Brotherhood - urged voters to keep the
article intact as well as adopt measures to quicken the race to elections.

Since the referendum, the Brotherhood have attempted to discredit fears that
their new political platform will maintain elements of the fundamentalism
that defined the party's first political manifesto back in January of 2007.
Part of that draft, which called for clerical rule and stated that women and
Christians could not run for president, also suggested, that if elected to
power the Muslim Brotherhood would subject the 1979 Israel-Egypt Peace
Treaty to a national public referendum.

While the Brotherhood claim to now occupy a much more moderate position in
Egypt's shifting political landscape, increased attacks on both Sufi shrines
and Christian churches - though blamed on radicalized Salfist elements -
show a significantly emboldened base of support for the kind of
uncompromising notions put forward by the Brotherhood historically.

In a deliberate public push-back Tuesday, Assistant Defense Minister Mohamed
Mukhtar suggested that Egypt will not be run by "a new Khomeini" and that
the SCAF will impose measures to "protect the country from extremist
groups."

Exactly what that means strategically remains currently unclear. 

 <http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/35200> 


 

 

 

 



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